by Barber, Tom
However, they had still put it to a vote. They were three of them there, with Tate out of town, so they knew they'd have a 2:1 majority vote whatever the outcome. Farrell outlined the complications, still pissed off but thinking more clearly. There was the distant chance that the English guy would tip off the cops or feds, either because he was one of them or to give himself breathing space and hopefully get the three of them in handcuffs as he left town with the money in the back of the cop car. And by now, stadium security would have found the tied up guards, the money loaded in the bags and almost a million of it missing. The whole city would be talking about it. They knew security on the truck was going to be tight, but now it was going to be tighter.
He’d asked for an opinion and decision, one-by-one.
And all three of them agreed that the job should go ahead.
Taking a seat on the last remaining chair in the room, Farrell had called Tate, who was down in the hotel in Atlantic City. At least all his plans were going accordingly. He said that he’d passed most of the cash from the two Chase jobs through the tables, just over a million, separated into wads of a hundred thousand and traded for chips. Tate said he’d even won large at one of the tables, and had earned them an extra forty grand. He’d said he was going to clean the remaining five hundred grand, get his head down then drive up tomorrow with the untraceable cash ready for the final job, the Flushing heist.
So it was agreed.
The job would go ahead.
But the one thing they all wanted a shot at before they left was revenge.
Regan knew where the guy was staying. He’d followed him home on Monday after the street-fight. Judging from all the shit inside, it didn’t look like it was his place, but nevertheless the guy had definitely been bunking down here. Regan himself had been waiting on 30th Avenue on Tuesday, and had seen the guy walk out from this street and the door to this building. This was his place. Carmen was up on Steinway, watching the subway and any approach from the west. Farrell was at the gym, finishing up arranging their gear and cleaning up anything they’d need to take with them. They would all leave the city as millionaires tonight, each with enough money to buy whatever they wanted. The shotgun in his hands, aimed at where the door would open, Regan smiled. His bags were all packed. His apartment was ready. He was good to go, to leave this dump and never return.
But all he wanted was the English asshole before he left.
He’d thought about what he would do if the guy showed up or if Carmen found him down on the street on Steinway. He wouldn’t fire straight away. That would alert the neighbours and people on the street. He’d put the gun on him and make him wait. Then he’d pull his phone and call Farrell. After he arrived, they’d tie up and gag the pretty-boy then take him somewhere isolated, somewhere with soundproof walls. Probably the lower, thick brick rooms at the back of the gym, behind the steel door. Then they would go to work on him. Leave a nice, nightmare-inducing crime scene for the FBI and NYPD.
He smiled and leaned back in his chair, the barrel of the shotgun aimed flush at the door. He checked the time.
10:31 am.
He was going to come back here one last time.
Regan could sense it.
NINETEEN
Back across the city inside the Marriott Marquis Hotel, Archer stepped off the elevator for the 21st floor and stood still for a moment, letting the doors close behind him. Once he’d explained where the memory card was, he and Sanderson had discussed what to do next. Sanderson said he was going to head to Federal Plaza immediately and get back-up, both to find Siletti and O’Hara and to set up an ambush for the Flushing truck heist Farrell and his team were planning for tonight. Archer said he’d handle getting the memory card from the camera. They had risen, shaking hands and parting ways, Sanderson headed downstairs to the taxi rank, Archer back to the hotel room.
Walking down the corridor to the room, he slid the key-card into the slot and pushing down the handle, walked into the room. Shutting the door behind him, he saw that Katic and the girl were awake, both enjoying a room-service breakfast. They were perched side by side on the edge of the bed, a table pulled up in front of them with some toast, spreads and cereals on the counter. They looked up and smiled as he entered, closing the door behind him. He also saw Katic withdraw her left hand from her handbag sitting beside her on the bed, no doubt her 9mm Sig inside, on her guard. He smiled.
‘Morning, ladies,’ he said.
‘Morning,’ Jessie said, through a mouthful of toast.
Archer looked at Katic, who got the message that he wanted to talk. She rose and moved outside past the screen door to the balcony, Archer joining her and pulling it shut. The sun was shining across the city and there was the usual chorus of car horns and shouts from the streets twenty one floors below.
‘What did he say?’ Katic asked, biting off a chunk of toast.
‘He’s gone to call for back up. An entire Division from D.C will be here before sundown.’
‘That’s perfect.’
‘Also, the proof my father said he had. Apparently it’s photographic.’
‘Really? That’s great. Who were the shots of?’
‘He didn’t want to reveal any names over the phone. He was getting ready to drive down straight away and deliver it all himself. Then he got killed.’
‘Siletti and O’Hara.’
Archer nodded and pictured the pair. Siletti, lanky, that pencil-thin moustache, his slicked back hair. His narrow face, Gerrard’s stolen suit too big for him. His broken nose. O’Hara, all red hair and Irish fury, standing on Katic’s fire escape, shotgun in hand.
‘Sanderson said my father was using a digital camera, not the traditional ones, according to the details of his assignment on the report,’ he said. ‘The team investigating his death haven’t been able to recover it.’
‘So we need to find the camera. Or just the memory card.’
‘I know where it is.’
Her eyes widened. ‘What? Where?’
‘Inside the drawer of the nightstand at his apartment. I saw it in there the day I arrived.’
She cursed.
‘Shit. You can’t just walk over there and knock on the front door, Archer. Farrell and Siletti will both have that place staked out, guaranteed. The NYPD will probably be around too. You won’t get within thirty yards of the place.’
‘I know. But I need that card. We get that, we have actual physical proof. They won’t be able to twist themselves out.’
‘Why didn’t you ask Sanderson for help?’
‘I can’t hang around and wait on this one. And I don’t want to draw him into the danger. This is my mess, not his. He doesn’t deserve to be shot at.’
‘OK. Then I’ll come with you,’ she said, finishing her toast.
He shook his head. ‘You need to stay here with Jessie.’
She went to argue, but the words didn’t come. He was right.
‘There are people out there looking for both of us, right now,’ he added. ‘One of us needs to stay with her at all times.’
‘But how are you going to get the card?’ she asked.
He shrugged.
‘I’ll figure something out.’
He rose and opened the sliding doors, heading for the door.
‘Are you leaving?’ Jessie asked, jam and toast crumbs around her mouth, cartoons blaring out of the T.V in front of her.
‘Afraid so,’ he said. ‘But I’ll be back soon.’
He took a last look at Katic, who was standing just inside the sliding doors, looking worried. The morning sunlight was beaming down from the sky behind her, and it lit up her hair, a deep almond and crimson brown.
She looked breathtaking.
He nodded to her. ‘I’ll be back soon.’
And he left.
The taxi rank for the hotel ran undercover from the street, so Archer joined the line and climbed into one when he hit the front of the queue. There was no sign of Sanderson, so he must have jumped in on
e already and was on his way downtown to Federal Plaza. There were a couple of hotel security guards standing nearby, but no cops, and he hadn’t seen his face on the news report in the bar so he figured he’d be OK.
After pulling open the door to the taxi, he took a seat inside and shut the door. The driver turned.
‘Where to?’
‘Astoria. 30th Avenue,’ Archer said.
The man nodded, and the car pulled round the corner and out into the daylight and Times Square. They started down the street, and Archer saw the NYPD Times Square base of operations approaching on their left, a group of officers stood there on the kerb. He looked the other way inside the cab, passing them, and once the taxi had moved on, he forgot about them and started wracking his brains, wondering how the hell he could get into his father’s apartment without anyone knowing about it.
There were three possible entrance points. From the right on 38th, from the left on 38th or through the back window, accessible by walking through a shop on Steinway Street. None of the options were appealing. There would be eyes on the front door, guaranteed, and he would make too much noise trying to get through the back window.
And he was sure that someone would be inside. Probably Regan. Maybe even Farrell, if he was still as angry as the night before, demanding retribution for ditching them on the kerb. And not only would he have to get inside, but he’d also have to get out of the area before they got to him. Ideally, he needed to get in and out without them ever knowing he was there.
But how?
He thought for a moment, the car moving across the city, closer and closer to the apartment.
Suddenly, he had an idea.
‘Change of plan,’ he told the driver. ‘Take me up to the Upper East Side. 92nd and 1st.’
‘You got it,’ the driver said. He turned left on 3rd Avenue and the car sped uptown through the Sunday morning sunlight towards the Upper East Side.
*
Regan had just sparked his fifth cigarette when he heard the front door downstairs open. His eyes widened. Stubbing out the cig in a mug beside him, he sat up in his chair and took the Ithaca in his hands, aiming right for the door-space. He heard the door shut and feet coming up the stairs and his pulse quickened. He tightened his finger on the trigger, taking out most of the slack weight, preparing himself. He’d changed his mind about taking his time with the guy. The moment he opened the door and stepped inside, he would fire, aiming for the legs.
But suddenly, someone knocked on the door with the bottom of their fist, hard.
BamBamBam.
A shout followed.
‘Police! Open up!’
Oh shit.
Regan thought for a split-second, then jumped up, rushing to the fridge. He pulled open the door and pushed the sawn-off shotgun inside, resting it on the door shelf carefully. He pushed the door shut quietly, checking the rest of the room for anything else that could give him away. He suddenly realised he had a small bag of coke in his pocket. He pulled it out and tucked it into his sock, smoothing down his jeans over the top.
‘Police! Open up!’ the voice called again.
‘OK, hang on,’ he said, double-checking everything. Then he moved to the door and twisting the lock, opened it.
Outside, two cops were standing there, a man and a woman, both late twenties, both stern-faced. He gave them his best smile, but they didn’t smile back.
‘Are you the homeowner, sir?’ the man asked.
Regan shook his head. ‘No, officer. I’m house-sitting for a friend.’
‘We just got a call of a domestic disturbance at this location.’
Regan frowned, genuinely surprised.
‘That’s impossible. I’m the only one here.’
‘Mind if we take a look around?’ the female cop said. He saw the expression on her face and noted the sharpness in her voice. He guessed any domestic disturbance call rubbed her the wrong way, like it would for any bitch cop.
‘Sure,’ Regan said, letting them inside.
He moved back, watching as they started examining the apartment.
The two of them walked in slowly, looking around the place.
‘Who’s your friend?’ the cop asked.
‘A guy from high school. We’re real tight.’
‘Where is he?’
‘Baltimore. Wedding.’
At the door, Regan saw two other officers had arrived. The pair already inside the apartment turned and nodded to their colleagues, who themselves separated and started examining the other rooms in the apartment. One of them walked across the floor and into the kitchen. Regan licked his lips as he watched the guy examining the outside of the fridge, and silently prayed he wouldn’t reach for the handle.
‘When’s he going to be back?’ the female cop asked, across the room. ‘Your friend.’
‘This afternoon I think. Can I get you guys some coffee? Or tea?’
They ignored him, and continued to look around, walking slowly, with the complete confidence and authority that their badge allowed.
Eventually, the female cop turned to her partner. ‘There’s no one here,’ she said, and he nodded back in agreement. She turned to Regan. ‘OK. It was probably a fake call. Happens time to time. Probably some kids or neighbours wanting to stir up trouble.’
The other two cops had heard this and were already moving to the door. The female cop walked up to Regan, looking him in eye.
‘Sorry to have bothered you, sir,’ she said.
He nodded. ‘Not at all. Have a good day, officers.’
The last two cops moved to the door and left, all of them headed down the stairs and out of the building. Regan pushed the door shut, waited still for a moment, then breathed a sigh of relief and moved back to the fridge. He pulled open the top compartment, and slid out the shotgun quietly. The metal barrel was already cold. He moved quietly back to his seat by the door and returned, resting the shotgun on the second chair, and grinned.
The English asshole had probably made the call, figuring the cops would find whoever was inside and clear them out. It hadn’t worked. Putting the shotgun to the ground, he grabbed a C.D case from the table to his right and walked over to the kitchen, grabbing a thin knife from the drawer. He walked back to the chair, sat back down and pulled the bag of coke from his sock. He’d hit a couple lines to freshen him up. As he poured some of the white powder out of the bag onto the CD case, he glanced back at the door, the shotgun resting on the chair.
Sooner or later, he was going to be here.
And he would be right here waiting for him.
Downstairs on the street, the male and female officers moved to their car, nodding to their two colleagues who had heard the call over the radio and had arrived on foot. One of them headed right, back to his beat on 30th Avenue, whilst the other officer headed to the left towards 31st Avenue. The male cop inside the squad car fired the engine and pulled off the kerb, moving away from the apartment and headed left down the street. He tapped the horn as they passed the officer, and he raised a hand in a wave as they headed off down the street and turned right, moving out of sight.
The officer arrived at the corner of 38th Street, and crossed over to the other side. He moved through the smoke of the food truck and headed down Steinway, walking fast. He checked behind him to make sure he hadn’t been followed, then lifted and opened his hand.
A memory card was there.
Under the police hat of the cop uniform he’d worn at the Garden heist, Archer looked at it and smiled.
It worked.
The next step was finding a drug-store, and that wasn’t too hard. There was a big Duane Reade alongside the entrance to the subway on Steinway Street, just a minute’s walk away.
Taking another look behind him, Archer headed fast down the street. It was a Sunday and Steinway was relatively quiet, but he realised that those he passed were nodding and giving him a wide berth due to his uniform. It made him smile, considering he was probably the most wanted man in the city r
ight now. He walked swiftly down the street, and saw the Duane Reade up ahead, the other side of the street.
Minding the traffic, he crossed over, approaching the wide doorway and heading inside.
The air-conditioning system inside the store was blistering cold, and it hit him like he’d opened a freezer as the sliding doors opened. Clearly the manager preferred to stay cool over keeping his electricity bill down. Inside, he saw the place was quiet, much like the street outside, with just the occasional person wandering the aisles and browsing the shelves. The only employee he could see was a bored teenage girl behind the counter, reading a magazine and mechanically chewing on gum. She saw him enter but her eyes moved straight back to whatever article she was engrossed in.
‘Photography?’ he asked her.
She pointed a manicured nail straight ahead, not bothering to look up from the magazine.
‘Far side. By the wall.’
Archer nodded and moved down the aisle. He found the electronic machine he was after mounted on the wall. Checking he hadn’t been followed, he took off the policeman’s hat and tucked it under his arm and slid the memory stick into the slot. It loaded, and he had to press a few buttons, but suddenly the first shot appeared on the screen, asking him if he wanted to edit it before printing.
He pressed ignore and studied the photograph closely instead.
It was a surveillance shot, taken late at night. Three men and a woman, in a parking lot. One of the men was Farrell. That much was immediately clear. He was standing face-on to the camera. Ortiz was standing beside him, dressed in a white vest and black sweatpants, her arms crossed, the light from the lamp-post showing the pronounced curves of the muscles in her arms and the sharp edge of her jaw-line.
They were facing two men in what looked like a meeting. The other two had their backs turned. It was dark, so making out exact distinguishing characteristics was a challenge, but he saw a tall, gangly shape on one of them and fiery red hair in the other.
Siletti and O’Hara. Unmistakeable.